with India remaining quiet. — Hanover
Was the attack on Salman Rushdie consistent with mainstream Muslim theology? — Hanover
Was participation by white Christian nationalists in the events on January 6 in Washington DC consistent with mainstream Christian theology?
As is common in situations like this, the question asked is more telling than the answer. — T Clark
No, you just try to divert with by chastising me for covert bigotry, but at best you've presented a Tu quoque ( — Hanover
The fatwa was from a Shia. 15% of Muslims are Shia, the rest are Sunni. I don't know if Sunnis would feel the need to address a Shia issue. Sunni leaders don't have any authority over Shias. — Tate
Regardless, the 1/6 events were not carried out in the name of religion, but were the result of a political ideology. I do condemn those in the Republican party who have either supported those acts or claimed them part of their ideology. — Hanover
was not my intention to imply your post is bigoted any more than yours implied that Islam is a violent religion. I was implying that your example is misguided. Yours is generally a voice for moderation but I think you were immoderate here. — T Clark
don't know if Sunnis would feel the need to address a Shia issue. Sunni leaders don't have any authority over Shias. — Tate
you say, for most people the events were not performed for religious reasons, but some white nationalists I have read about participated with explicitly religious motivation. — T Clark
Sunni's are the vast majority, so the answer to question of whether the attack was consistent with mainstream Islam is no. — Noble Dust
There are always radicals, but my concern is official group doctrine. It does seem the Sunnis may separate themselves from the Shia here, leaving their problem not a moral one, but a PR one in that the distinction in position is not known by many. — Hanover
the the OP had read "mainstream Shia Muslim theology" I would have laughed. — Noble Dust
I've changed my mind. I think you are engaging in religious bigotry. Also hypocrisy. If you were talking about black people, women, or gay people, I don't think your abusive diatribe would be allowed on the forum. I don't think you would allow a discussion like that on the forum yourself. — T Clark
Was the attack on Salman Rushdie consistent with mainstream Muslim theology? — Hanover
No -- Rome's or Canterbury's excesses neither justify nor excuse Tehran's pontificating mullahs. A plague on all their houses! — Bitter Crank
I personally don't see the point in looking at theology. — Jamal
But unlike Christianity, there is no credible central Islamic authority. — Jamal
That is an important feature. Theological interpretation is apparently quite decentralized and local. There's no pope, no Vatican, no infrastructure of command and control. — Bitter Crank
you polled 10,000 Moslems from various countries, my guess is that a majority would not be in favor of executions for book writing. There would be a minority (10%? 20%? 30%?) who would approve, and they would approve for various reasons. — Bitter Crank
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